With her home infested with "extreme mold," Tori Spelling and her five children have been living in a mobile home at a campsite.
On Aug. 2, DailyMail.com published images (see them here) of the "Beverly Hills, 90210" alum and her family sitting on lawn chairs outside an RV at a campsite in Ventura County, California. The beachside location has views of the Pacific Ocean and photos showed the actress and her children — Liam, 16, Stella, 15, Hattie, 11, Finn, 10, and Beau, 6 — walking down a rocky path toward the water.
The group seems to have set up quite the home, as a cooler, a stove, a pop-up table and a rug were visible.
Absent from the images is Tori's estranged husband, Dean McDermott, who announced on Instagram in June that their marriage was over after 17 years; he later deleted his breakup announceent.
Tori has been trying to find a semi-permanent place to live since her rental home became infested with "extreme mold" earlier this year. Most recently, the family — sans Dean — stayed at a $100-a-night motel. After a paparazzo asked her why she was staying there, Tori hit back, "Are you a parent? You know you would do whatever you can for your kids, right?"
The "Messyness" host recently released a series of text messages she exchanged with a realtor who said her housing drama was "amusing."
"Human empathy and kindness prevails. Kids in crisis is amusing," she replied back, according to the screenshots she shared.
"This human is a father! I guess I hold out too much hope that people lead by kindness… My 5 kids are going through Mold poisoning and we need a home and this is how you treat people? Mocking their situation?" she added.
Tori — who grew up in a $165 million mansion owned by her TV mogul father, Aaron Spelling, and her socialite mother, Candy Spelling — took to Instagram in May to detail her housing crisis.
"Our troubles are next-level with our MOLD problem and the house that's been slowly killing us for 3 years," she wrote on her Instagram Story. "My kids are so sick and can't get well and our family needs help. Overwhelmed."
In an earlier message about the "extreme mold" infestation, she said, "We've all been on this continual spiral of sickness for months. Sick. Get better. To get sick again."